Expose an existing IMS™ transaction as a RESTful service by using the IMS Mobile Feature Pack.

Test the newly created RESTful service.

Leverage the newly created RESTful service in a web application.

We will demonstrate how to expose the IVTNO transaction in the IMS phonebook application (IMSPHBK.cpy) as a RESTful service by using the IMS Explorer for Development, and how to invoke this service from a web application to add, delete, display, and update a phonebook entry.

In this overview video, we describe the new installation process for the
IMS Enterprise Suite 2.2 version of SOAP Gateway on the z/OS platform.
We explain the new installation architecture and its benefits, what IBM
Installation Manager for z/OS is, why you should use it to install SOAP
Gateway, and how the installation process generally works. Two
additional videos then demonstrate how to install IBM Installation
Manager for z/OS and how to install and configure SOAP Gateway for use.

This sample demonstrates how to perform basic administrative tasks for a SOAP Gateway server on z/OS. Follow the instructions in the sample comments to modify the files for your environment and administrative tasks.

The zip file contains two samples: a JCL job that executes one or more SOAP Gateway management utility (iogmgmt) commands and then copies the utility output to the job log, and a sample shell script that prunes the SOAP Gateway log files according to parameters that you specify. The shell script as provided executes once, but includes basic instructions for the Unix cron job scheduling facility. The JCL can be used to execute iogmgmt commands without starting an OMVS session. These scripts are also provided with the SOAP Gateway installation package.

You can also modify the sample JCL to directly execute the sample shell script if you include the shell script as a CMD argument in the JCL.

Although these samples are intended for IMS Enterprise Suite 2.1 SOAP Gateway, they demonstrate concepts that are generally applicable to products that run under the z/OS Unix System Services environment.

This end-to-end sample demonstrates how to enable an IMS™ application as
a web service with WS-Security SAML 1.1 signed assertion, and how to
create a client application that sends messages through secure HTTPS
communications to the IMS Phonebook web service that is deployed on the
SOAP Gateway server.

This end-to-end sample demonstrates the steps to enable an
IMS™ application as a web service. You can choose the path to follow,
either without WS-Security, or with Security Assertion Markup Language
(SAML) 1.1 unsigned sender-vouches tokens. This sample also demonstrates
how to create a client application that sends messages through secure
HTTPS communications to the IMS Phonebook web service that is deployed
on the SOAP Gateway server.